Saudi Arabia-Palestine FIFA qualifier delayed

Agence France-Presse

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Saudi Arabia-Palestine FIFA qualifier delayed
Saudi Arabia cites "exceptional circumstances" for not wanting to play in Palestine as many Arab nations refuse to play in the West Bank, saying it "normalizes" Israel

LAUSANNE, Switzerland – FIFA have postponed next week’s 2018 World Cup qualifier between Palestine and Saudi Arabia until a decision is made on where the match between the two nations should be played.

A meeting was held at FIFA headquarters in Zurich on Tuesday between Palestinian Football Federation president Jibril Rajoub and his Saudi counterpart Ahmed Eid Al Harbi to discuss the issue.

“It was decided to postpone the match until the ongoing process has been concluded,” a FIFA spokesperson told AFP on Wednesday.

According to a source familiar with the case, “the Saudis have 3 days to justify in writing why they don’t want to respect the right of each federation to play at home”.

The World Cup 2018 organizing committee, chaired by UEFA president Michel Platini, will meet again in the coming days to review the matter, the source added.

The fixture, set for October 13, had been scheduled to take place in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, but Saudi Arabia on September 23 demanded that it be played on neutral ground.

That demand was accepted by the World Cup organizing committee but the Palestinian Federation refused to accept, saying: “Depriving Palestine of the right to play at home is a dangerous precedent and impossible to accept under any conditions.”

The teams met each other in Jeddah in June, with the Saudis winning 3-2.

That match was actually supposed to be played in Palestine but Saudi Arabia had refused to travel to the West Bank, citing undefined “exceptional circumstances”.

Many Arab national teams refuse to play in the West Bank, saying it “normalizes” Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory.

Israel controls all access to the Palestinian territories, and Saudi Arabia has no diplomatic relations with the Jewish state. – Rappler.com

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